Saturday, June 13, 2009

Mary McCormack: Howard Stern Says My Boobs Are Great (BlogTalkRadio.com)

June 12th, 2009

CAPTION: "I feel so lucky that he's such a sweatheart," Mary (above) tells us of Howard.

"I feel so lucky that he's such a sweetheart," Mary (above) tells us of Howard.

It’s good to know that Howard Stern - who married longtime lady friend Beth Ostrosky in October - still loves his movie wife.

Interviewed on Mr. Media, Mary McCormack says the King of All Media to this day thinks of her as his queen.

Mary, 40, of course played Howard’s first wife, Alison, is his 1997 biopic, Private Parts.

When host Bob Andelman asks the actress, “You still in contact with Howard Stern?” she replies:

“I am. I was at his wedding this year.”

Later on, the married mother of two says she never thought that being cast as the mother of Howard’s kids would lead to a lifelong commitment to the shock jock.

“He’s been a great friend to me over the years. And I hope he always will be. I mean, who knew? You don’t expect it from Howard Stern,” says Mary, who plays U.S. Marshal Mary Shannon on In Plain Sight.

CAPTION: As Alison in "Private Parts."

As Alison, with Howard, in "Private Parts."

“He’s everything you don’t expect… He’s so lovely to me and always has - and he says my boobs are great.

“So, you know, it could be worse.”

In Plain Sight airs Sundays at 10 p.m. ET on the USA Network.

To hear Mary’s full interview, click here.



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Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Alec Foege, RIGHT OF THE DIAL: THE RISE OF CLEAR CHANNEL author: Mr. Media Interview

It is so easy to hate terrestrial radio these days. No matter how many stations you scan, AM or FM, it’s difficult to find one on which you can land without moments later wanting to take a sledgehammer to the radio.

The politics are angry and irrational -- left and right. The music hasn’t changed in 30 years and it seems to repeat every hour. Local news and talk is virtually non-existent. Ditto for humor.

The smartest radio guy of the last 20 years, Howard Stern, escaped more than two years ago and is better than ever in the unshackled environs of Sirius Satellite Radio.

Who screwed up radio?

Will today’s generation of young people even care in a few years, what with the glut of alternatives before them, from satellite and Internet radio to iPods and cell phone broadcasting?

I suspect these are just of the few issues I’ll be discussing today with my guest, Alec Foege, author of Right of the Dial: The Rise of Clear Channel and The Fall of Commercial Radio.

You can LISTEN to this Mr. Media interview with ALEC FOEGE by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below!

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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Roger Bennett, CAMP CAMP, DISCO BAR MITZVAH author: Mr. Media Interview

My parents never sent me away to summer camp. I don’t blame them; as a kid, I was afraid of my own shadow, easily got car sick, and was not well adjusted, socially.

And after reading Roger Bennett’s new love letter to summer camps, Camp Camp, I’m pretty sure I would have hated sleepaway camp.

That said, I found reading about it to be great fun. And I think my own kid, now approaching the age where sleepaway camp is being discussed, would love it.

Speaking of kids, this is the first Mr. Media interview where I’ve ever been on high maternity alert; my guest's wife was due to give birth last week, but hasn’t yet. So if Roger Bennett has to leave suddenly, I’ll just read from his book to fill the time, okay?

You can LISTEN to this Mr. Media interview with Roger Bennett by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below!

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© 2008 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.







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Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Robert Schimmel Returns, CANCER ON $5 A DAY author, standup comedian: Mr. Media Audio Interview

Robert Schimmel was my guest on Mr. Media recently and despite an hour of conversation, I felt like we barely began talking when time ran out.

And based on listener response, it seems many of you felt the same way, so I’ve invited Robert back to pick up where we left off. So please welcome back to Mr. Media one of the best stand-up comedians in America and the author of Cancer on $5 a Day, Robert Schimmel.

You can LISTEN to this interview by clicking the BlogTalkRadio.com audio player below!

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Sunday, July 08, 2007

Robert Wuhl, "Assume The Position/Arli$$/Hollywood Knights" actor: Mr. Media Interview, Pt. 1


Robert Wuhl cracks me up. Always has, always will.

His HBO series, “Arli$$,” about an over-ambitious Hollywood sports agent, was must-see TV in my house for years, and I’ve seen his first movie, Hollywood Knights, hundreds of times. Really, hundreds. If you haven’t seen it, buy it.

In terms of media experience, Wuhl played reporters in Batman and Cobb and a disc jockey in Good Morning, Vietnam. And when Billy Crystal hosted the Academy Awards in 1990, 1991, and 1992, Wuhl contributed a good many of Crystal’s best lines. This, I’m sure of.

It doesn’t hurt that we share a birthday, October 9th, and we’re both New Jersey natives.

This month, Wuhl returns to HBO with his second “Assume the Position” special. It’s a raucous run through history in which Professor Wuhl takes charge of a class of college students and shares “more stories that made America and the stories that America made up.”


DOWNLOAD THE MP3;
LISTEN
HERE.

ALSO AVAILABLE AS A PODCAST
ON iTUNES.


BOB ANDELMAN: What attracts you to history so much?

ROBERT WUHL: Well, I like storytelling. I mean, that’s basically it. I just like storytelling, and that’s all history is is storytelling. Of course,
the thing to always remember is you have to keep in mind who’s telling the story. What’s their agenda? What gain do they have? What point of view are they saying?
And I just like storytelling, so history lends itself, because it has characters in it.

ANDELMAN: When did you become skeptical of the way history is told?

WUHL: I think by nature I’m just skeptical. You know, not cynical. I don’t like the idea of being cynical, because as (Oscar) Wilde said, “A cynic knows the cost of everything but the worth of nothing.” But I am skeptical. I always want to know who’s telling the story, and I just question. And then, there was a great quote from (Paddy) Chayefsky in “The Americanization of Emily” where he said, “I don’t know what is good or bad or true. I let God worry about the truth. I only want to know the momentary facts of things.” And I think that’s a pretty good line.













ANDELMAN: How much do you read? My sense is that you must read a lot.

WUHL: I do a lot of reading. I read mostly non-fiction, obviously. The Internet is a godsend for research. But I do read; not as much as my wife. My wife reads fiction, and she reads a book a day. She used to work for Simon and Shuster, so she just devours fiction. I read nonfiction.

ANDELMAN: What have you read recently?

WUHL: What did I read recently that’s really good? You know what I just read that was terrific was Katherine Graham’s book, which was wonderful, Personal History. That was a great book. And then I just read a novel by Frank Deford, The Entitled, which was a nice read.

ANDELMAN: What made you want to get in front of a classroom of college kids and talk history? It is one thing, it seems to me, to read history and to study history, but you really put a lot on the line by getting in front of kids who have nothing to lose by challenging and heckling. But you get up there in these specials, and you just turn it on.

WUHL: I thought there was a way to do this. I just thought there was a way to make history more entertaining in front of a classroom. I’m very pro-student. The beauty of Chris Albrecht, the genius of Chris Albrecht, is that when I pitched him the idea, he said, “Okay, the one thing I know about what you’re talking about is that we have to commit to shooting it. You can’t have a script and develop it. It’s like developing a stand-up act. You just have to shoot it.” These things are pretty labor-intensive, so it takes a while, then we workshop it in the classrooms for a couple of months, and then we go and shoot it in New York.

Robert Wuhl on YouTube
Clip 1: 2007 Writers Guild Awards
Clip 2: Real Time with Bill Maher

ANDELMAN: The presentation is very stand-up style. I don’t know, I’m just going to ask you: have you done a lot of stand-up?

WUHL: Oh, sure. I started out as stand-up.

ANDELMAN: Yeah, I wasn’t sure about that. And are you doing stand-up now?

WUHL: I don’t do much of it. No. I really don’t do much of it any more. I’ll do some corporate dates, and I do a lot of hosting at charity events. Occasionally, I’ll go and do a stand-up gig but not too often.

ANDELMAN: What can a high school teacher or college history professor learn from stand-up comedy about presenting their material?

WUHL: I don’t know if they can learn anything.

ANDELMAN: Really?

WUHL: You know, I’m fortunate in that I can workshop it out, and I do have a background, and I don’t know if it’s fair to ask any other teachers to do that. That’s not their job. Remember, first and foremost, it is a piece of entertainment. It’s an HBO entertainment special, and it is a comedy special. I would always say to use context. That would be the biggest thing I would say to teachers, explain context of why and how these things happened rather than just giving names, dates, and places, because that means nothing. That, they will memorize for a test and forget the next day. If you put a face on it, understand the characters involved and what their motivations were for doing something, then that would be my only thing to say.

ANDELMAN: Who do you most admire from American history?

WUHL: Probably the common man, probably the working man.

ANDELMAN: Oh, that sounds like a Time magazine answer, Robert. “The Man of the Year is YOU.”

WUHL: It’s true, though. I admire the people who have to, as we say in the show, get through it. The people of power make decisions that affect usually not them, you know, but usually the people who work and live under them, so I really do respect the working man, the working woman, the family guy, the woman who’s keeping a family together in the obstacles of society, whether it be present-day or the past. It’s all present-day family, I mean, no matter when it takes place. History takes place in the present. It doesn’t take place in the past. That’s who I most admire. I mean, there are figures, just like any other kid, sports figures or scientific figures or stuff like that, people who accomplish. Anybody who accomplishes, gets through the workday and does their job, I’m a fan of them, the working men.













ANDELMAN: One of the things you say is that when the legend becomes fact, print the legend.

WUHL: Right. That came out of The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.

ANDELMAN: Right. What does that mean, exactly? How would you explain that to someone who didn’t see the show.

WUHL: Well, that’s exactly what I think a lot of history is is that the stories are passed down, and then they become accepted as fact, and then people print them. They take it that way. That’s just the nature, and that one, it was pop culture, of culture. You know, when you get a story long enough, you do believe it, especially when it becomes accepted.

ANDELMAN: Robert, you make a point in both “Assume the Position” specials, the first one from a year ago and this new one: You say that your dad was a Republican, your mom a Democrat, your wife is to the left of Lenin.

WUHL: Yep.

ANDELMAN: Now, you’ve been interviewed and gone toe-to-toe with Bill O’Reilly, but is it intentionally difficult to get a fix on your politics?

WUHL: My politics are, I look at each individual issue. I think you have to take everything into consideration. Because my dad was a businessman, he had a family business, so when you do that, your view on how government affects you is different than somebody who doesn’t, and so it just gives you a different point of view. I grew up in the Northeast, in New Jersey, and I went to school down in Texas There you are exposed to a whole different culture and whole different points of view. I think that’s really good. Basically, however, in this country, social issues and stuff like that can change, but you are dealing in a capitalistic system, so the one party is the capitalist party. The other stuff I really don’t think matters a whole hell of lot. Again, social issues, individual issues, yes, but as far as other things, not that much.

ANDELMAN: You made a very strong case for Hedy Lamar’s post-Hollywood accomplishments, so I need to ask you, how will American history look back on Paris Hilton?

WUHL: Oh, God, I don’t even think about Paris Hilton. I’m probably the only person in the world. I think she won’t be remembered, basically. She’ll be a footnote, unless she creates something great. As of right now, I don’t know what the future holds.


© 2007 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.




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Saturday, June 30, 2007

Larry "Ratso" Sloman, "Secret Life of Houdini," author: Mr. Media Interview, Pt. 2


ANDELMAN:
Good luck with that. Let’s talk about some of your work as a collaborator or a ghostwriter. I know from my own experience, because I do a lot of that work, that you never know from book to book if you’re going to be thought of as a ghostwriter or a collaborator. Even if your name is on the book, some people still call you a ghostwriter. You worked with Howard Stern on both of his books. How did that job come about?

SLOMAN: That was the beginning of my second career. I had been writing my own books for years. I had done that Dylan book which you talked about, On the Road with Bob Dylan, and while I edited High Times magazine and then National Lampoon magazine, I wrote a book called Reefer Madness, A History of Marijuana in America. Then I did a book on the New York Rangers, because I played hockey twice a week, even still today. I had kind of an eclectic nonfiction background.

I had portrayed myself in a movie that a friend of mine shot in Luxemburg, and the director was friendly with Stern’s agent, Don Buchwald. Buchwald had clients that he was always trying to get in to direct his films, and I had heard Howard talking on the air about writing a book. I said, “Wow, that sounds like fun. I wouldn’t mind doing that.” So my friend the director called Buchwald, and Buchwald said,
“‘Ratso?’ That sounds like a perfect match for Howard.”
And I met first with Judith Regan, because she was the editor of the book. We had a nice meeting, and then we set up a meeting between me and Judith and Howard and Buchwald. I remember the night before the meeting, I’m wondering, “Should I come up with something for this meeting? I mean, what should I do? Is it just a meet and greet?” And I figured out, I’ll come up with some idea. I remember going to the meeting, and we were talking about what the book might be like, and I said, “You know, Howard is very famous for his on-air ad lib ads, where he’ll do like a whole minute or two and just rip for one of his sponsors, Snapple or whoever it is. I said, “Why don’t we have each chapter sponsored by a different sponsor, and they loved that idea. Howard couldn’t believe it. “That’s fantastic!” Ultimately, they never did it, but that would have just been so great to have to interrupt each chapter with Howard doing an ad. So that’s how that came down.

ANDELMAN: I have that in front of me. It was just a fun read. It was unlike any autobiography I think I’ve ever read.

SLOMAN: Talk about being a ghostwriter! I became the most famous ghostwriter in history because my name’s not on the front cover, but….

ANDELMAN: But your picture is in there.

SLOMAN: Yeah. The lead acknowledgement. But more than that, Howard had five or six hours every morning on the air, so what does he talk about? He talks about his life, so he talks about working with Ratso. I became such a celebrated ghostwriter because he was talking about it every day on the air. And he was so shrewd. He’s such a master of publicity, like P. T. Barnum. Howard had worked up his audience, literally, for months and months and months before they released the book.

I’ll never forget, when the book finally came out, on that day, right after the show, we were going to go over to Barnes & Noble on 5th Avenue for an autograph signing. Howard rallied the troops – “Come out and see us on 5th.” The morning show was over, and I went in the limo with Howard to drive over there. We were driving down one of the side streets, and we couldn’t even get close to 5th Avenue. We figured there’s been some accident or someone got shot. Ronnie, the limo driver, said, “You better get out here, because I can’t even get close to 5th Avenue.” We got out, and we see 5th Avenue’s been closed down because 35,000 people were in front of Barnes & Noble! I felt like Murray the K; I felt like the fifth Beatle. One of the greatest experiences of my life.

ANDELMAN: I’m guessing that the store did not have that many copies of the book on hand. If you guys were surprised by the turnout…

SLOMAN: They were reaching out to every other store in the area. I know Howard wound up staying there until six in the afternoon, and he signed every book. It was just phenomenal.

ANDELMAN: That was quite a story, and when you have that kind of outlet to promote something, and of course, the movie then followed and the same reaction…

SLOMAN: Right. And he was a joy to work with. He makes what he does look so easy, but I know how much preparation goes into his radio show. The guy was just a tremendous Jewish workaholic, and it was two Jewish workaholics in the same room. I would go out to his house after he got off the air. We’d get out of there maybe around 11:00, and we’d start working, and sometimes it would get to be 7:00 at night, and Howard would look at me and say, “Are you hungry? Do you want to keep going?” And I’d say, “All right, let’s eat something.” And he was always into these weird diets, measuring out how many almonds he could have, and he would put out food like salads, and I would say, “Howard, feed me! I’ve got to eat something!” But we had a great time doing it.

ANDELMAN: You were around on his last day on terrestrial radio, so you’ve obviously maintained that relationship. Will he ever write another book?

SLOMAN: One of the last times I saw him a couple of weeks ago, he said, “I really want to write another book. I don’t think now is the right time, but when it is, I am going to have a lot to say.” So we can look forward to that.

ANDELMAN: Let me ask you this: as you look back on all the biographies and the ghostwritten autobiographies, the collaborations that you’ve done, is there any book that you wish you hadn’t written? And I’m wondering this because of one particular title, and you kind of alluded to it earlier, Thin Ice: A Season in Hell with the New York Rangers.

SLOMAN: No, I was just taking a literary reference and putting “Rambo” into a book about hockey. That was actually a terrifically enjoyable book to do. I love hockey. In fact, I’m going to every one of the Ranger playoff games. It turned out not to be the greatest season because they didn’t do well that season, but I had tremendous access to the guys, and it was very fulfilling to write the book and to be recognized. There’s a book out I think called The Five Best of Hockey or whatever, and it has a list of the five best slapshots, the five best whatever, and one of them was the five best books ever about hockey, and they included Thin Ice, which was gratifying. If anything, to answer your question, I would say I don’t wish I didn’t write it, but probably the most tedious experience was the Abbie Hoffman book.

ANDELMAN: Really?

SLOMAN: Don’t get me wrong. Abbie was a hero to me. Growing up, he was the kind of Jewish warrior role model for me. I was very young, escaping Queens to go to the East Village for the Summer of Love.
The first time I met Abbie Hoffman, I was hanging out at the East Village Other, which was the underground newspaper in the East Village. This wild guy comes in with crazy electric hair, a Jewish Afro, and he says, “Come on, come with us, come with us.” And we went to the stock market, and the yippies threw money onto the floor of the stock exchange. It was one of the greatest guerilla actions of all time.
I loved hanging out with Abbie, and we remained friendly over the years. My friend Kinky Friedman even harbored Abbie when he went underground -- he stayed at Kinky’s ranch in Texas. But doing the book was unpleasant, and one of the reasons was because I did the oral biography form. I tried to make it as seamless as possible, just going from interview to interview without any kind of narrative thread.

ANDELMAN: It’s a challenge.

SLOMAN: It wound up taking about nine years to do because people’s agendas aren’t yours. You always have to track down this person, and this person leads to ten more people, and then if you’re a completist, I gotta interview a hundred more people, and so it just never ends. Also, there was all this animosity going on. You could see why the Left never succeeded in anything, because they were always devouring themselves. They were always fighting over turf, and it was like, how could you write this book about Abbie, because his wife is writing a book, and his brother’s writing a book… You know, it was just insanity.






ANDELMAN: Before we run out of time, we have to talk about Bob Dylan, of course. What is your fondest memory of the Rolling Thunder Review?

SLOMAN: Well, it’s hard to pinpoint one memory, because basically it was Dylan going back to his roots, surrounding himself so that the burden of superstardom wasn’t just on him but making it into an old-timey review and having Rambling Jack Elliott with him and Joan Baez.In every town we went to, whoever was in town, whether it was in Toronto, Gordon Lightfoot, Montreal, Leonard Cohen in Connecticut, Joanie Mitchell showed up. She wound up staying for the next three weeks. It was a magical kind of caravan of just wonderful creative people.

I think the greatest thing on the tour was when I had a fight with my editors at Rolling Stone. They were interested in how much the tour was grossing, and they were interested in that kind of stuff, and I was much more interested in describing this cultural phenomenon, so I wound up quitting Rolling Stone in the middle and leaving the rental car in Vermont somewhere and just staying on with the tour.
I had asked Dylan, I said, “Look, this has to be documented. Let me write my story,” and he did, and he let me stay on the tour, and I really documented everything.
ANDELMAN: You know, as you were describing that, I just remembered something from when I was a teen. I was about fourteen or fifteen when that tour was going on, and I remember being in the family station wagon driving through upstate New York on the way to Connecticut and hearing on the radio that this tour was going to happen, and it was the first time, and I remember thinking, you know, I’d really like to go to that.

SLOMAN: It was an amazing thing, because it was almost like a guerilla tour, there wasn’t really advertising. They would go into a town, and it was all small little venues for the most part at the beginning of the tour, and they would put up posters, the Rolling Thunder Review, and it was very mysterious. The tickets would immediately sell out. And to see him at the height of his creative powers, because I wrote the liner notes to the Sony Records reissue of the tapes from that tour, a two CD set, and if you listen to that, I mean, he’s in my estimation never been greater. So much energy every night and so inspired by all the artists around him and also trying to get Hurricane Carter out of jail, so you had the whole social consciousness. It just was an amazing, amazing tour.

ANDELMAN: What’s your relationship with Dylan today? Have you maintained that, as well?

SLOMAN: Yeah. After the tour, a few years later, George Lois, a famous advertising guy, and I produced a video for Bob called "Jokerman" that was on the Infidels album, and you know, we stay in touch, and I see him whenever… He told me in that book that touring is in his blood and he’s basically a nomad, and it’s absolutely been true. He’s on the road 200 days out of every year. So whenever he comes to New York, I go see the show and go backstage. He’s a tremendous inspiration just to keep going, and his last three albums have been amazing. I don’t like to use media terms like comeback, because he never went anywhere, but to have the attention focused on him again for his tremendous creativity, his contributions is very incredible.

ANDELMAN: Now, the story I’ve heard about your nickname, Ratso, which I can’t even, it pains me to even say it out loud, is that it came from Joan Baez, that she had called you Ratso, and you asked if it was because you reminded her of Dustin Hoffman, who co-starred with Jon Voight, in Midnight Cowboy, for the younger people who don’t know what we’re talking about, if that’s correct so far, could you kind of finish the story from there?

SLOMAN: Yeah, well, you know, it was during the tour, and you know how on a tour you get a little grubby and you don’t shave, maybe you take some substance so you can stay up at night… I had a red Granada rental car, and I remember driving up to the hotel where they were staying, and they were playing volleyball outside with a few people.
Baez comes over to the car, and she goes, “Hey, look, it’s Ratso!” And I said, “Oh, you called me Ratso because I remind you of Dustin Hoffman?” She said, "No, you remind me of Ratso Rizzo,” and that stuck.
Once she called me Ratso, I turned the book around from first person to third person, so then Ratso became this character that was kind of under the microscope for the rest of the book. It was an interesting trip, because Dylan had invited me on the tour, and then he had this layer of management and road managers whose job was to keep the press away from him. It was funny, because I knew all the people in his band, I hung out in that scene. Phil Ochs at the time was my roommate because I had moved into his apartment, and he had nowhere to go, so we let him stay in the apartment, so Dylan was very gracious and very forthcoming and very cordial to me, yet the managers were always trying to kick me out. They would even tamper with my car at times, and it became a big joke, so Ratso became this kind of character who had to surmount all the odds to get his story.

ANDELMAN: And you’ve embraced that over time. I mean, e-mails from you come with that in the name. I mean, you could have let that go at any time, but you’ve actually…. Am I wrong? You’ve embraced that.

SLOMAN: I guess I could have. Well, you know, Sam Shepherd wrote a book about the same tour. Sam Shepherd was high into writing a screenplay for Renaldo and Clara, the movie that Bob was doing while they were touring, and it wound up that that didn’t work out. I guess he felt he had spent so much time on the road, he may as well do something, so he put his journal together into the Rolling Thunder Logbook, and he wrote a couple of chapters about me in that book, and at one point, he called me “The Supreme Master of Tact and Bad Taste,” and it was a compliment. I mean, he compared me to some of the kind of avante garde artists that he knew from the East Village, so I guess, you know, I took pride in being that, and Ratso was as good a name as any.

ANDELMAN: Well, on that note, Larry -- "Ratso" -- thank you so much for joining us on Mr. Media this week.

SLOMAN: It was a pleasure.

© 2007 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.




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Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Larry "Ratso" Sloman, "Secret Life of Houdini," author: Mr. Media Interview, Pt. 1


Writing the biography of a well-known person in pop culture is an assignment fraught with trap doors, two-way mirrors, and shackles. Some writers even disdain their subjects. Others hopelessly suck up to the person, if living, in hopes of winning their favor.

Journalists working the genre, however, are usually after something more. They took on the life of an individual because they believe -- through professional research and interviews -- that they can add more color or depth to what’s known about the figure’s public and private lives.

Today’s Mr. Media guest, Larry “Ratso” Sloman, has trod the path of biography and ghostwritten autobiographies a number of times in his career.

He wrote Steal This Dream about the life of 1960s dissident Abbie Hoffman. He helped Howard Stern pen his life story in two memorable books, Private Parts and Miss America. When Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers needed someone to help tell his story, Kiedis turned to Sloman.

The book many people remember Sloman best for, however, may well be his chronicle of Bob Dylan’s remarkable 1975 Rolling Thunder Review concert tour, On the Road with Bob Dylan. That is also where he earned his unusual nickname, which I’m told he wears with pride like a badge of courage.

Sloman’s latest book, written with William Kalush is The Secret Life of Houdini, the Making of America’s First Superhero.

DOWNLOAD THE MP3; LISTEN HERE.

ALSO AVAILABLE AS A PODCAST ON iTUNES.



Read an excerpt from
THE SECRET LIFE of HOUDINI
By William Kalush and Larry Sloman
Click Here



ANDELMAN: Larry, welcome to Mr. Media.

SLOMAN: Nice to be here.

ANDELMAN: Thank you. Larry, Houdini is a fast read, thanks to the focus on storytelling and the wealth of incredible detail that you and your partner uncovered about the magician and the man. Can you tell us a little bit about how the book came about and the style in which it’s written?

SLOMAN: I first got interested in magic when I co-authored or ghostwrote -- David Blaine’s memoir, Mysterious Stranger. It was a hybrid book. That book was part reminiscence about his various stunts and being encased in ice and being buried underground. It was also part teaching you how to do some magical effects, and it was also a kind of history of magic. For the history part, David said, “You have to go work with Kalush, because he produced all my shows, and he’s got the most amazing magic library in the world.” So we spent a lot of time at Kalush’s library, the Conjuring Arts Research Center.

We did all this research, and we did a chapter on Houdini in the David Blaine book. That was my first exposure to reading about Houdini. I read all the extant biographies of Houdini at the time, and I remember sitting around with Kalush and saying, “You know, it’s really strange. I mean, there are all these gaps in Houdini’s story, and he makes strange career choices. I think there’s more to this than meets the eye.” And Kalush says, “I agree.” And the more we looked into it, the more we said, “It’s time to take a fresh look at Houdini,” and that’s the genesis of The Secret Life of Houdini.

ANDELMAN: What about the storytelling? What I really like about the book is that every page is almost a separate anecdote in some ways in that you’re always storytelling. It’s not so much analysis, which some people expect in biography, but it’s storytelling, which is what I expect, and I really like that.

SLOMAN: It’s funny the way we wrote this book. In a way, we almost wanted to do a celebrity biography of Houdini akin to the ones I had written with Howard Stern and people like that. We wanted it to be accessible; we wanted it to be anecdote driven. There was a professor at NYU, Silverman, who had done an exhaustive biography, which kind of laid out a lot of the facts, and yet it really didn’t. The story wasn’t driven by these anecdotes, and to us, that seemed the best way to capture Houdini. He’s such an incredibly complex guy.




















ANDELMAN: You did a tremendous amount of research in terms of organizing stuff that was arcane and seemingly unconnected.

SLOMAN: Thanks to what we lovingly called, “Ask Alexander.” It was based on Alexander the Mentalist, and what we did was create a huge, huge database. We scanned in every known Houdini book, all the magic magazines that Kalush had in his collection, all the letters, and all the scrapbooks, and made them text searchable. The book could have taken 25 years to write if we weren’t able to really have that instant access. This research project was over two years. So at the beginning of research, you may come across a name. A year and a half later, you may come across that name again and say, “Wow, I think this guy has something to do with…” Well, we just put the name into the database, and boom, in five seconds, we had every hit on that name. It was a tremendous expedient. I think it’s really the first Houdini biography of the digital age, and we were able to collate all this incredibly diverse material.

ANDELMAN: Now, a lot of writers -- and Doris Kerns Goodwin comes to mind -- have been in trouble the last couple years with issues of plagiarism. I’m not saying that you did this, but my question is, when you scan in material like that, how do you avoid that? I mean, Doris’ comment was, “It was inadvertent that I used material from another source,” but when you go to this digital type of system and you scan in all this stuff, it would seem like the situation is ripe for that kind of abuse

SLOMAN: Our book is full of citations. We very liberally use Houdini’s own writings. We use letters that he had written. I don’t think the problem so much is plagiarizing anything, because the analysis that we did was almost separate from the writing process. We overlaid the analysis onto the writing, and the analysis was basically between me and Kalush, who was the magic expert. So if there was a question of how Houdini did something and we wanted to reveal that, and a lot of times we didn’t reveal that, obviously. But there were times where we did reveal some of his methods, and that was overlaid after the main narrative had been written already.

ANDELMAN: Will the way that you used technology to research this biography affect the way you do it in the future?

SLOMAN: Absolutely. I mean, I think there’s no other way to do it. It’s so overwhelming to have that amount of material, but when you have it in a way that’s manageable and that literally you can do searches in microseconds … All the major newspapers now have their entire archives in databases. We were able to find out a lot about John Wilkie, who was the head of the Secret Service and whom nobody really knew anything about. We were able to find out his connections to the world of magic through an article in the Washington Post in 1908, because of this new technology. It is certainly an incredible boon. I’m sure we would never have been able to find those articles if not for that.






ANDELMAN: I think one of the most controversial revelations in the book is Houdini as a spy.

SLOMAN: It’s funny. It was controversial at first. The magic world is very insular, so a lot of these guys were saying, “We don’t know about this, so therefore it can’t be true.” But when you get a guy like the former head of the CIA, John McLaughlin, who reads the book and says, “Yeah, I’ll write an introduction to your book,” and says in the introduction, “This is absolutely plausible to me.” So
I don’t think you could have anybody better vouching for your theory than the former head of the CIA.


ANDELMAN: Absolutely. Well, it’s a great read, and I hope it’s doing well, and I hope more people will read it.

SLOMAN: Well, it’s doing well, and in fact, the latest wave of unbelievable press and attention has been the whole exhumation thing, and that was based on our research. It was one of these serendipitous things.

Two years ago, I attended the annual Houdini séance that Sid Radner, a Houdini scholar and collector, puts on every year. That year, it was in Las Vegas, because he was also auctioning off a lot of Houdini material. At the séance, there was the great-granddaughter of Margery, the world’s most famous medium at the time, who was Houdini’s adversary in the last years of his life.

I approached her. It turns out she lives in Long Island not too far from where I have a weekend place, so I said, “Could I come and interview you?” figuring that there may be some great family anecdotes about Margery and Houdini, and she said, “Sure.” And I go to visit her and her husband, and they make me a nice dinner, and we have a great interview, and at the end of the interview, I said, “You wouldn’t happen to have like some letters or any kind of documents laying around?” She said, “Oh yeah, come on.” And she takes me into a spare bedroom, and she opens up the closet door, and the entire closet is filled with boxes and boxes of correspondence, including correspondence with Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir Oliver Lodge, all the leading luminaries of the spiritualism movement. It’s got over thirty scrapbooks of Margery that were amassed by her husband, and nobody had seen this material for 80 years except for her and her mother.

My jaw dropped. I wound up spending the next two weeks over there every day. She was such a doll, she even helped me carry the material to the local store to Xerox it. Those thousands of pages were then put into the Alexander, made text searchable. From that material, we developed the most compelling part of the book to me, which was the last few years of his life and how the battle with the spiritualists may have ended with Houdini’s death at their hands.

We don’t say for sure that we definitely think he was murdered, but we raise enough issues about it that Houdini’s grandnephew read the book and said, “I want to get to the bottom of this.” It means we would have to exhume his body and test for poisoning.
While we were writing the book and talking about the last few years of his life and the medical problems at the end, we had consulted Dr. Michael Baden, who is one of the great forensic pathologists in the country, in the world. Baden called a friend of his, a colleague, Professor James Starz at George Washington University, who’s a dual professor in law and forensics. This is a guy in cases where, to solve a murder mystery or things like that, he has exhumed some very famous people. I sent him the book on Baden’s recommendation. He read it, and he said, “You guys have really raised enough issues -- sign me up, I want to get involved in this.” He has amassed an amazing team of forensic scientists -- two anthropologists, two toxicologists, two of everything because he is very thorough, two pathologists, including Dr. Michael Baden. The team is all set, and now it’s just a matter of going through the legal motions. It’s tremendously gratifying to us that the research that we came up with could lead to the world’s leading forensic scientist to say, “I think you guys really have something here. Let’s look into it.”

WATCH:
Larry "Ratso" Sloman on "Countdown with Keith Olbermann"

Sloman and co-author William Kalush discuss Houdini

Vintage film of an actual Houdini escape



ANDELMAN: It’s one thing to collect history, but then to suddenly find yourself affecting history has got to be very rewarding.

SLOMAN: People say to me, “What difference does it make? It was 80 years ago; whoever killed him, if they did kill him, is long gone.” What difference does it make? I think it makes tremendous difference, because if Houdini died fighting the spiritualists who, in his mind at that time, were Public Enemy No. 1 because they were preying on the most vulnerable people in society, people who had recently lost loved ones and were desiring to get in touch with them, and these people were manipulating and conning and bilking these people out of tremendous amounts of money, and if Houdini wound up being murdered by them, then he died a hero’s death. He was not just one of the world’s greatest entertainers, but his life assumes heroic proportions.

ANDELMAN: I want to ask you one more thing about Houdini, and then there are some other things I want to talk about. I suspect that what a lot of people know about Houdini comes from the movies, Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh for the old-school gang or Paul Michael Glaser and Sally Struthers for my generation. I wondered if you had a preference now among the portrayals?

SLOMAN: I don’t think any of them have really captured Houdini. In fact, the worst was the Tony Curtis film, because that’s a passive-aggressive example of how Hollywood could defame a legend. They have Houdini dying in one of the devices of his own making! But Houdini became a superman to people because he could never be constrained. That was his whole shtick, and every night, he would be tested, he would be challenged, whether it was handcuffs or leg cuffs or put in a box, put in a safe, inside a giant football, or inside a big whale. I mean, no matter what it was, he got out, and to have Hollywood killing him in his own water torture was the worst.

ANDELMAN: Has your book been optioned for TV or a movie at this point?

SLOMAN: Well, there is talk going on right now, so knock on wood, we’ll see what happens.





















© 2007 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.




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Sunday, May 27, 2007

Eric Rhoads, "Radio Ink" editor: Mr. Media Interview

Following months of rumors, the two satellite radio companies, Sirius, and XM, last week confirmed one of the industry’s worst-kept secrets: their only hope of ever making a buck may well be combining their businesses.

• Will Howard Stern and Martha Stewart soon be under the same K-Mart comforters as Opie and Anthony and Oprah Winfrey?

• Will Major League Baseball and the National Football League both be available to sports fans from the same radio provider?

• Will Sirius honcho Mel Karmazin be satisfied being number two to XM chairman Gary Parsons?

• Will Mr. Media ever have to listen to “Radar Love” on terrestrial radio again?

To address a few of these issues, I have invited Eric Rhoads, publisher of Radio Ink magazine, into the Mr. Media podcast and web site this week.

Published every other week since 1989, Radio Ink is perhaps best-known for its annual “40 Most Powerful People in Radio” issue. It’s the radio industry version of the Forbes 400.

I have known Eric for almost eighteen years, since I wrote for the predecessor to Radio Ink, the Pulse of Radio. Eric’s publications are devoted to the business of radio, so I thought he would be the perfect person to offer perspective on the proposed Sirius/XM merger.


DOWNLOAD THE MP3; LISTEN HERE.

ALSO AVAILABLE AS A PODCAST ON iTUNES.

ANDELMAN: Eric, thanks for coming on the show.

RHOADS: Thanks for having me, Bob. It’s nice to touch base again after all these years.

ANDELMAN: It has been a while. What was your initial reaction upon learning that Sirius and XM actually intend to merge?

RHOADS: I was not surprised, and, of course, I had a little bit of an insight from inside the industry. We’ve been rumoring this throughout the industry and in our daily newsletter, Radioink.com, for months, literally months, and having friends on the inside of both companies, there has been a lot of chatter and a lot of discussion, and it was believed really the moment that Mel Karmazin went on board that that was the master plan. As a matter of fact, I think a week or two weeks after Mel came on board at Sirius, we had a story about a rumor about a merger between the two companies, so it’s been going on now for a year, year and a half, two years, however long it’s been since Mel’s been in there. So it was not a huge surprise, but of course, you are never sure if these rumors are going to be true.

ANDELMAN: Now, were you surprised over that period of time how Karmazin brought Sirius around to be taken far more seriously than it was at the time he arrived?

RHOADS: Well, again, I wasn’t surprised, because Mel has incredible amounts of credibility. In spite of all the things that you might hear about him and his operating style, some of which are just legend and probably not true, Mel has an incredible ability to see things that others don’t see, to have a vision that others don’t have, and he has the ability to turn something that is sour into something that is sweet. He has done it time and time again. He did it with Infinity Broadcasting, and then he went public, and then he went private again, and then he went to CBS and so on, so he’s got this incredible ability. I don’t own stock in Sirius, but I seriously thought about it at the time Mel came on board, because I think Mel is good at turning these kinds of things into something that is very valuable. And it was expected. When Mel left the job at CBS, there was all kinds of speculation that he was going to go run Disney, that he was going to do something else at another major media company, and the fact that he didn’t do those things, which he probably could have had those opportunities, and
the fact that he went to Sirius sent a major signal. It was kind of like a missile across the bow of the radio industry that hey, radio’s top player is now working with the competition,
if you will, if you take that attitude about it. My attitude is a little different, and that is, my attitude is that I feel that it’s not really the competition, it’s just a different form of radio. From a consumer standpoint, it’s still radio. It may be approached differently, it may have different components, but it’s still radio, so I think that raises the tides of all ships. I don’t look at them as the competition as many people in radio do.

ANDELMAN: I want to come back to that in a couple of minutes, but what impact has satellite radio had on terrestrial radio, financially and creatively?

RHOADS: Probably very little. Financially, I would say it’s had no impact. The radio industry is in a little bit of a lull right now. It’s experiencing very low amounts of growth. We hold an annual forecasting summit in New York every year, and at the forecasting summit we did in December, all the analysts gathered, and we predicted that the 2007 year is going to be either flat or about 1% growth, and so the industry is not going through a huge growth spurt right now, but that’s not necessarily anything to do with the satellite radio, because those revenues are about advertising revenues, and, of course, Sirius and XM are not really advertising-based models … yet, and we will get into that at some point, too. So I don’t think that they have affected the revenue picture. On the creativity side, you know, I think that radio broadcasters have always had their own way of approaching things, and quite frankly, XM and Sirius are really doing the basics of radio, and they are doing what radio has always done really well. They have always done great creative. XM and Sirius have had the opportunity to not have the financial pressures right now, the financial pressures that mean that you have to run a lot of commercials, financial pressures that mean that you have to do certain things to get ratings. The reality is that XM and Sirius don’t have to get ratings right now because ratings are what drive advertising, and since they don’t have any advertising, there is no need for that. So when there is no pressure, then programming creativity is a lot more easily accomplished than when there is pressure, and, of course, that pressure has affected the creativity levels of a lot of radio stations in the United States but certainly not all of them. You do have companies and you do have individuals who are doing very good radio and very creative radio and not necessarily doing the things that drive some consumers nuts, but that’s here and there, and it’s not everywhere. You also have companies that are doing the opposite, that are just getting a little too commercialized. Although, if we have time, we should talk about a study that just came out about the impact of commercials, because it’s the opposite of what anybody thinks.

ANDELMAN: I am curious about something. On the financial side, it would seem to me that the defection of Howard Stern from terrestrial to satellite did have a big impact going back to the point when Clear Channel wiped him off of its stations and then up to the point when he left the CBS, I guess the CBS network, I mean, all of those stations that carried him lost a tremendous amount of revenue that I don’t think they have made up yet, have they?

RHOADS: No, and I would say that that is a very good point that I did fail to articulate. CBS, I believe, I don’t have the figures in front of me, but my memory tells me that Stern made up about $60 million of revenue for the CBS stations. Stern obviously made up a fair amount of revenue for the individual stations that were not CBS-owned that were carrying him, whether they were Clear Channel or otherwise, so taking $60 million out of $19 billion certainly hurts, but in the grand scheme of things, that’s not the reason that radio’s flat. It certainly has a piece of it, but I wouldn’t say that, I can’t say that satellite radio in general has been the reason that radio’s flat. That is a small piece. It’s a loss, certainly a loss, and Stern has been a master at bringing in revenue for radio.











ANDELMAN: Okay. Has there been any other positive for radio since the satellite radio companies have begun? Have they done anything good for terrestrial radio?

RHOADS: Oh, sure. You know, it’s interesting how publicity plays on the minds of things, on the minds of people. You know, we all love technology. I know you’re a tech buff, and I’m a tech buff, and I love everything that’s new, and every time there’s a new iPod, I want to go out and buy it, and every time there’s a new gadget, I’ve got to have it, and every chance I get to grab a new piece of software, I’m into it, but there’s this buzz that has been created somewhat by the satellite guys and also just by the fact that there is so much other buzz in other areas, with new iPods and new this and new that, that radio’s old and old-fashioned and old technology, and yet, the drop-off rates you would expect to be a lot larger than they really are. Now, there has been a very, very minuscule amount of drop-off in listening of radio, but it is literally minuscule. People are still spending I think 97%, either 97 or 98% of Americans are spending twenty hours plus a week with the radio, and that’s more than they’re spending with a lot of other media, and that hasn’t really changed, and so people are still listening to the radio in spite of the fact that a lot of people would like to say that it’s not cool any more. You know, radio still provides a great service, and, of course, there are a lot of different kinds of radio stations and formats that appeal to a lot of different people. There does seem to be some dwindling, minuscule, but some dwindling, in the youth markets, and I think a lot of that is driven by the fact that some of the radio companies have gotten a little greedy and run a little bit too high a commercial load. But in general, radio’s still got a lot going on. There are a lot of new programs, a lot of new formats, and actually, in the last five years, I think there have been more new formats launched than there had been in the last fifteen or twenty previously.

ANDELMAN: You know, I am going to interrupt you for a second, Eric. It seems to me that there is going to be a huge generational gap in ten years, maybe less than that, of people who did not grow up taking their information and their entertainment from radio and have no expectation of doing so. I have a ten-year-old daughter who would never think of turning on the radio for music or information or to be entertained, and if I mention radio to her friends, they are like, “Why would we listen to that? We can listen on the Internet, we can listen to our iPods, we have 500 channels of cable television.” Or if their parents that have Sirius or XM, they tune to that. I mean, it just seems to me, and as an adult listening to terrestrial in the last two years, when I’m in a car that doesn’t have Sirius, which is what I subscribe to, I get very frustrated with the radio. Not just the commercials. Everything that the personalities say is pre-packaged, they are not spontaneous. I mean, the days of the old Q-Zoo from the ’70s and ’80s where things happened spontaneously, it seems a hundred years ago or wherever it may be. Scott Shannon in New York or, of course, Stern or any of those kinds of things. It seems like rather than re-fashioning their business plan or their creative plan that terrestrial broadcasters are just recycling the same old hash.

RHOADS: There’s about 30 questions in that, and I will try to address all 30 of them. The first part of that is that you are absolutely right. There is a huge generational gap that is taking place. I, too, have kids, and I also have nieces and nephews who are young adults now, college-age, and I’m experiencing these kids who are saying to me, you know, “Well, we just never do listen to the radio.” And yet I catch them listening to the radio, but it’s not a high priority, it’s not… When I grew up and perhaps when you grew up, it was kind of the soundtrack of our lives, and to a lot of kids, it’s not that any longer, and that is driven by two things. One is distractions in other areas. As you say, all the different things that they have. They have texting and IM, and they have all the different music sources from the satellites and from the Internet and from everything else, and they have video games and cell phones and just lots of distractions, and so all of those things probably cut into it. And the bigger issue is that, a lot of the reason this stuff has happened is because a lot of the companies stopped paying attention. You have companies like Clear Channel, for instance, and, of course, everybody likes to beat up on Clear Channel, and some of it’s undeserved, and some is well deserved, you have companies like that who said, “You know what, we can kind of homogenize this stuff across many markets and turn it into McDonald’s and make it formulaic and use one voice-over guy for multiple markets, and we’ll make sure that one music guy picks the music for multiple markets,” and as a result running a lot of radio stations on auto-pilot or other forms, satelliting them and so on, and as a result, those stations often times sounded a little bland. And the theory was that, let’s take what’s working in one place and multiply it into multiple places. And you know, it really was okay for a short period of time because it did sound good and it sounded different, but it seems to have staled out in some cases. So I think the responsibility is on all of the companies in radio to make sure that they are doing a good job, and, of course, I don’t want to sound like an old-timer, but when I cut my teeth in the radio industry, I was 14 years old, and I was on the air on a radio station. Well, I was pretty awful when I was on the air at 14, but that’s how you learned. And today, there aren’t very many places where a 14-year-old kid or an 18-year-old kid or a 25-year-old person can learn to cut their teeth on radio because the all-night show or the all-night weekend show where perhaps there weren’t very many people listening where you could put a kid on the air to learn the ropes and learn how to become talented, those shows are now automated or satellited, and so there’s not a farm team being developed, and so you have an industry where a lot of the talent was in the previous generation, which is now starting to either wind down or get pushed out, and then you do have a smattering of younger talent, but it’s much harder for them to learn and develop unless people are willing to take chances on them, there’s fewer places. So that all impacts these things.

ANDELMAN: Doesn’t it sort of seem like radio, which I love, I mean, and that’s where we started our conversation eighteen years ago, I love radio in whatever form it may be, but there are two other industries, media industries, from the 20th Century that I think are facing the same issues, and that’s book publishing and newspapers.

RHOADS: I think television is facing that, as well.

ANDELMAN: Television, as well, and television is finding other ways to… It seems like television is finding ways to adapt to the new reality, the new media expectations, but radio, newspapers, and book publishing, book publishing is still done the same way it was in the 19th Century. I mean, they have bigger problems, but…

RHOADS: I disagree with that. There are so many services where I can put my book online and within a day receive a hard copy of my book, and they will also set up distribution and put it on Amazon, and there are services like that which have revolutionized the book industry, but to your point and to confirm what you’re thinking, unfortunately, most of the companies who were in the book business have not realized that they need to get with the ’80s. Obviously, the ’80s are gone, but all industries face this. This isn’t something that happens….
Every generation, there is a major shift.
This just happens to be a much faster and much bigger shift because of what’s happened in technology and the high speed at which it’s moving, and some of the newspapers have kept up, but most of them haven’t, and the newspapers are starting to drop like flies, readership is dropping like flies, and I sit down and read the newspaper every morning because it’s just a habit, and as I read through the stories, I thought, I saw this on Drudge yesterday, or I saw this on Google yesterday, and this is old news to me. There are things that it fulfills that I am not going to see on Drudge or Google because I don’t go to local websites as much and get things that are localized, and I like seeing that local stuff, but this is happening with newspapers, it’s happening with all media and even to television to the extent that the YouTubes will have their impact and how that’s all changing, the self-demand media and media that is going to be driven by the user. And of course, this whole revolution is about user content. And moving that back to radio, I think that the ultimate user content on radio has been talk radio. Talk radio has been a place where you and I, in theory, can pick up the phone and get on the “Sean Hannity Show” or the “Rush Limbaugh Show” or whomever and have a chat. Now, of course, the odds of us getting on that show because there are tens of millions of people listening, I think Limbaugh has 25 million listening every day, and Hannity is close to that, it’s not exactly an open forum, where, of course, the Internet, anybody can put a blog on, and if they’re good and they have something to say, the next thing you know, they’ve got hundreds of thousands of people reading them, or like you, you have all these people who are reading you and listening to your podcast, and I do that. I sit here in my home workshop where I am working on projects at night, and I listen to podcasts from people all over the world, and I learn things that I never knew anything about before that just wasn’t possible.











And it really empowers the people, but it all boils down to one thing, and that is, no matter how much you empower the people, if the people have nothing to say, or if they have nothing creative to exhibit, they still have no product. And that’s what radio has been lacking is that radio has not, and I don’t want to generalize, because there are people out there who are contradicting what I am saying by doing great, creative things and new, innovative things, but as a whole, it feels like the industry has gotten stale, and that staleness has been very much the result of -- dare I say -- bankers ruling the roost and saying, look, let’s cut expenses, let’s automate this, and who cares? I walked into at the very early stage of the consolidation, before Clear Channel had even bought all these radio stations, I walked into the office of a very prominent, very wealthy financier who later got involved in one of the big plays, and he was starting to buy up radio stations at the time, and they buy them up, and then they automate them and fire all the staff, and there’s no more localism, and he said to me, and he was dead serious, he said, “You know this automation thing we are doing it in the small markets East Los Angeles and Chicago, too,” and I was mortified. I thought, that’s the soul of radio. Radio’s not just about a distribution method, radio is really about one-on-one communication and entertainment, and if you take that soul away, the listeners are going to go away. I think that’s what’s been driving a generation away is that to some extent it’s financially motivated. For instance, in the advertising industry, there are cell groups, which would be different groups of eighteen to twenty-four, thirty-five to forty-four age groups and so on, and there are groups that are popular for advertisers, and then there are groups that are unpopular for advertisers.
One of the reasons that you don’t hear a lot of teens listening to the radio any more is because there are no teen radio stations anymore,
because teens are not a “desirable” demographic. They become desirable when they become 18 and they get credit cards. So the advertisers don’t want to support teen stations, and so the groups say, well, why should we have a station that gears to teens? Well, the answer is you should have one, because if you don’t get teens interested in radio, they are not going to become listeners when they turn twenty-five. And there is going to be a giant gap of no one listening to the radio when these teenagers who are not paying attention aren’t paying attention when they become what I call “money” demographics.

ANDELMAN: I have to interrupt you, because we are going to run out of time, and I want to take the conversation back to the XM/Sirius proposed merger. One of the ironies in this merger to me, at least it seems like, is that these two companies, whose content is largely unregulated, still have to get FCC permission to merge. Does that seem right?

RHOADS: Well, yeah, of course it seems right. The FCC controls the airwaves, and they control those air waves. When XM and Sirius were granted their license, keeping in mind that there were thousands of people who applied for those licenses and only two were granted, thousands of people wanted to build companies. Two people got them. Sirius was originally called CD Radio, or was that XM? I am confused. Anyway, when CD Radio, who was Mark Golus, got it, and then I think (Hugh) Panero got the XM, I’m not sure. Again, I don’t remember, but the bottom line was this, that the FCC said that, “Under no circumstances are you ever to merge, under no circumstances can you join. And we want to keep it, since we can only do two spectrums, we want to make sure that two different services exist, so that these services are not dominated by one company.” I spoke to a former FCC commissioner, Susan Ness, who approved the satellite radio at the time, she said, “Absolutely, legally speaking, they cannot do it. The law will have to be changed in order to do it.” And current FCC Commission Kevin Martin doesn’t want it to occur. I understand what Mel’s trying to do, but I don’t understand why they believe that they can get it through the FCC, and maybe they have some political connection that they feel is going to make it happen.

ANDELMAN: Do you think that the olive branch here might be, we’ll give it serious consideration, but you’ll have to bend to the same content rules that terrestrial…

RHOADS: No. No, I don’t think it’s going to be about content rules. The bottom line, and again, I spoke to the head of the NAB, David Greer, last week, and his position on this is this: just because you have not been able to financially make it doesn’t mean that the FCC should say, oh, well, you guys couldn’t make it, you can’t stand on your own, we’ll let you be together to make it. No. Let them go out of business. Somebody else will buy it and make it work. Every radio station, every newspaper, everybody else in the United States has to live that way, and so I think that the likelihood of it getting approved is probably very unlikely. I don’t think it’s going to happen. I think the FCC is vehemently opposed to it, and I would be shocked if they get it through, but you know, I’m wrong at least half of the time.











ANDELMAN: Do you think that Karmazin decided to go this route maybe fully expecting it would be turned down and that, in the meantime, he would build up Sirius and XM would continue to be kind of flat and that when all this was over, one would emerge, and XM would have to be sold or shelved or something?

RHOADS: Well, if I had an evil brain, and I am not suggesting he does, but if I had an evil brain, that would be a great way. I know someone who once tried to do a merger of two companies, and he never had any intention of doing it, but he learned everything he possibly could about every dime in the company and was able to make major inroads as a result of that. Again, I am not suggesting that that’s the case here.
I don’t think Mel would launch something like that as a ruse. He’s not that kind of a guy. He fully intends to get it done,
and he’s the kind of guy who says, you know what, I’m strong enough. I can figure out a way to get people to change the law. And maybe he can.

ANDELMAN: Is it in the interest of the National Association of Broadcasters, NAB, to oppose the merger?

RHOADS: Well, the NAB’s job is to support radio, and they feel as though it’s not good for the radio industry for the two to be together. I think they probably feel that if they both went out of business, it would be better for radio. I don’t feel that way. Again, back to the tide rising all ships, if satellite radio succeeds, then that’s good for all radio. Now, I suspect that what Karmazin will do is he’ll take 50% of the stations and commercialize them and turn them into selling commercials, money-making on the music stations, and then he’ll have some that are commercial-free.

ANDELMAN: If the two merge, if that is approved somehow, there’s a lot of redundant channels and business functions that will no doubt be eliminated. Will satellite employees be considered pariahs when they go job hunting on terrestrial radio?

RHOADS: No.

ANDELMAN: No. If they have the talent and the skill, they’ll be ….

RHOADS: Everybody knows everybody, and they are not evil people. We all have friends who have gone over to the satellite side, and some have left and come back, and some work for both. I know people who do voice tracking… All the satellite channels, for the most part, are also automated, it’s just they do a pretty good job of it. Of course, you know, they are hiring a lot of the great talent that has been ignored by radio.

ANDELMAN: We need to wrap up time-wise, Eric, but let me ask you this: do you think that an Oprah Winfrey ride on Howard Stern’s Sybian is that far off in the future?

RHOADS: I don’t know.

ANDELMAN: Well, I mean, you have kind of indicated you don’t think the merger is going to happen, so we are probably not looking at that possibility at this point.

RHOADS: You know, I may be completely wrong, but I just think that they are in for a pretty big battle. I think there is going to be a lot of political intervention, and there will be a lot of political capital trying to be gained from this, but I don’t think it’s going to happen. I happen to like those guys. I like them both, and I think that satellite radio has been good for the radio industry, if nothing else to kick them in the butt and say, hey, get your act together. It’s been proven people still listen to commercials. There is new research that says 97% of people don’t tune out, and that is something you should look into at some point. So I think it’s good for radio, and I don’t think the merger is necessarily good. I think that we need two different companies creating two different products. It keeps it competitive.

© 2007 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.

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